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90% PERMANENT SEEDS—THE BEST BUY IN LAWN SEED 
Seed the lawn in early spring or early fall. We list two Mixtures 
for various conditions. 
A well-kept lawn is a joy to any home-owner and will actually 
increase the value of his property. Good Iawns once established 
will last a lifetime. 
Dibble’s Lawn Grass Mixtures are superior in quality be- 
cause they are composed of only those grasses found to be 
suitable for the best lawns in New York and adjoining states, 
and only the highest grade of these individual grasses is used. 
Dibble’s Merion Blue Grass ste 
75% Merion Blue Grass 15% Colonial Bent Grass 0% Red-Top 
Merion Blue Grass is the aristocrat of the es grasses. It 
likes fertile soil in sunny conditions, tolerates drought, resists 
leaf-spot, and will stand close cutting. 
Sow 3 pounds of this mixture per 1000 square feet. See Special 
Price-List for prices. 
Dibble’s Red, White and Blue Lawn Mixture 
Contains only the highest grades of Kentucky Blue Grass, 
Colonial Bent, Wild White Clover, and Red-Top, mixed in the 
proper proportions. This has proved to be the best Lawn Mixture 
for any locality where Kentucky Blue Grass thrives, regardless 
of fancy names or cost. Sow 5 pounds per 1000 square feet. 
The above Lawn Mixture can be furnished without White Clover, 
if so desired, at the same price. 
Dibble’s Shady Lawn Mixture 
Rough-stalked Meadow Grass (Poa trivialis) is included im 
this mixture because it is the oe grass for heavy, moist soil, 
or in moist shade. New Zealand Chewing’s Fescue is also in- 
cluded because it does well in dry shade or sandy soils where 
other grasses fail. Sow 5 pounds per 1000 square feet. 
Should you desire any other special mixture, kindly send us 
specifications and let us quote, or order individual seeds separately. 
PERMANENT PASTURE MIXTURE 
Where midsummer moisture is high, it ts excellent for cattle, horses, sheep, and poultry. 
This mixture is recommended only for those areas to be left permanently in pasture 
where midsummer moisture conditions are adequate for such shallow-rooted plants as 
Wild White Clover and Kentucky Blue Grass. 
Ladino Clovers...2) 4025. lib. or Y/, quart 
Wild White Clover....... ie DOs Y quart 
PDIMOthY serene eaters) ° 5 lbs. or 31% quarts 
Kentucky Blue Grass.... 5 lbs. or 11 quarts For Diversion Ditches and Sod Waterways 
Total for 1 acre......12 lbs. or 1514 quarts 
Add 5 pounds Domestic Rye Grass and 2 pounds Red-Top to above mixture. 
EMERGENCY HAY CROPS 
If you are short of hay for this coming season, we suggest that you use some of the following quick hay crops 
Two bushels of Oats and one bushel of Canada Field Peas per acre, sown as early in the spring as possible, constitutes about the best catch 
hay crop eastern farmers can plant. Cut for hay when Oats are in early milk stage. Seedings may be put out with this mixture, thereby causing 
no upsetting of the rotation. 
SWEET CLOVER, sown with Oats on well-limed land, may be tall enough to cut with Oats, improving its protein content, and may be cut or 
pastured later. 
SOY BEANS make an emergency hay crop, having a feeding value similar to Alfalfa. oe Soy Beans. Drill shallow, on a good seed-bed, 
after corn-planting time, when weather is warm. Sow 6 to 8 pecks per acre if drilled solid, or 2 to 4 pecks in close rows. Cut after pods form 
and before leaves start to fall. 
SUDAN GRASS, drilled at the rate of 35 pounds per acre soon after corn planting, makes considerable amount of hay. Cut when just headed out. 
It will sprout up and make pasture or a second crop of hay. 
MILLETS are reliable producers and will make a crop in 60 to 80 days. 
Sow 30 pounds Golden or Hungarian Millet to the acre, or 20 pounds of 
Japanese, the latter in moist soil. Do not sow till weather is warm, and cut for hay just before the seed forms. 
